China rejects US rights 'hypocrisy'
China has rejected US criticism of its record on human rights in an official rejoinder which says racial discrimination and crime are still rife in the US.
The State Council, China's cabinet, denounced the US on Mar. 9 for what it called rampant violence and widespread discrimination against minorities, especially blacks, in its annual response to the US State Department's report on human rights worldwide.
"As in previous years, the State Department pointed the finger at human rights situations in more than 190 countries and regions, including China, but kept silent on the serious violations of human rights in the United States," the Chinese report said.
Beijing's response came a day after the US said the Chinese government's human rights record "remained poor, and the government continued to commit numerous and serious abuses."
Besides China, the US report, which was released on Mar. 8, condemned Iran and Syria and called the records of key Arab allies poor or problematic.
The US report, which has been published each year since 1977, said repression in China worsened in 2005, with a trend towards "increased harassment, detention and imprisonment" of people seen as threats to the government.
It also mentioned tightened controls over print, broadcast and electronic media, and censorship of online content.
The Chinese response, which drew mostly from reports and statistics in the US press, said the State Department report is "an act that fully exposes its hypocrisy and double standards" on human rights issues.
Blacks are given heavier criminal penalties, arrested more frequently and are more likely to be targeted for hate crimes, it said.
The report also accused US troops of committing brutality at prisons in Iraq and Guantánamo Bay in Cuba.
A large section of the Chinese report was devoted to racial discrimination, which it said had "long been a chronic malady of American society."
It said the country's blacks and other minorities had much lower living standards and incomes and faced job discrimination.
Blacks were also more likely to receive the death penalty for serious crimes, it said.
Since Sept. 11, 2001, the report said, Muslims had been targeted for arrests and detention, "flaunting the banner of 'anti-terrorism.'"
"No country in the world can claim to have a perfect state of human rights," the Chinese report said.
"We urge the US government to look squarely at its own human rights problems, reflect what it has done in the human rights field and take concrete measures to improve its own human rights status."